If you feel like your constant lateness and total disorganization is getting in the way of your life, it may come as a relief to know that these “bad habits” may be signs of adult ADHD (attention deficit hyperactivity disorder). While it’s likely you struggled with it more as a kid, the symptoms of ADHD can stick around, affect you into adulthood, and truly make life difficult.

So, how do you know if you have it? Well, you can start by taking a closer look at those problems you experience in everyday life. As psychologist Dr. Nikki Martinez says, “Inattention and hyperactivity are the most common types and symptoms of ADHD.” For instance, you might notice that you struggle to sit through a meeting, or you might feel like you’re wound up and running a mile a minute.

Whatever the case may be, it’s a good idea to seek some help if you feel like you have symptoms of the disorder. “The majority of people with ADHD as a child will develop coping tools and learn to work with it and around it to manage the disorder, and be able to be focused and successful,” Martinez says. However, it’s possible you were never diagnosed. Or maybe your ADHD is so severe that any treatment plans you received as a kid simply don’t work anymore. Read on for some habits that might indicate that’s the case. If any sound familiar, definitely talk to a therapist. While annoying to deal with, ADHD is not something you have to struggle with forever.

1. Losing Things All The Time

While it’s totally normal to occasionally misplace your wallet, it’s not so normal to never know where anything is. As author and psychiatrist Dr. Gail Saltz tells me, ADHD can make you feel scattered brained and disorganized. So take note if you’re constantly losing things like paperwork, books, or your phone.

2. Feeling Incredibly Fidgety During Long Meetings

What’s your MO in long, boring meetings? If you can’t seem to sit still, it may be a symptom worth looking into. “Adults with ADHD often have difficulty remaining seated for long periods of time (frequently fidget or get up from their seats), feel restless, [or] move as if driven by a motor,” says New York-based clinical psychologist Dr. Ben Michaelis. Sound familiar?

3. Getting Into Fender Benders

Impulsiveness is a major symptom of ADHD. It can affect you at work or in your relationships, but it can also lead to careless traffic accidents. As life coach Dr. Richard Horowitz tells me, there is data that shows a correlation between adults with ADHD and increased auto accidents. If you can’t keep your eyes on the road, it may be time to chat with a doctor.

4. Becoming Sidetracked Super Easily

Let’s say you’re about to wash the dishes or send an email. If you almost always forget to do it — or leave the task halfway finished — it might be something to worry about. As Saltz tells me, people with ADHD often get sidetracked and distracted, leaving their to-do lists mostly untouched.

5. Having A Hard Time Listening To Your Partner

If you’re having constant (seemingly unexplained) problems in your relationship, an undiagnosed case of ADHD may be to blame. As licensed counselor Christopher M. Stroven tells me, your partner may perceive your poor listening skills and/or inability to stay organized as being disrespectful or lazy. Of course you don’t mean anything by it, but they don’t know that. And thus problems ensue.

6. Always Running Behind Schedule At Work

If you’re feeling fidgety, disorganized, and distractible, it’ll most certainly show up in the form of problems at work. “This combination makes it very difficult … to achieve success as deadlines are often not met and having disorganized and unfinished work is the norm,” says psychologist Dr. Michele Barton, director of clinical health at Psychology Life Well. Definitely not OK

7. Constantly Interrupting Others When They’re Talking

Occasionally stepping on the end of someone’s sentence is really NBD. But if you can’t keep yourself from interrupting, take note. As Michaelis tells me, interrupting and excessive talking are both things people with ADHD do on the regular.

8. Multitasking To The Max

Take a look at your desk. Do you currently have about 55 projects going on at once? If so, this is often an indicator of the disorder. As licensed mental health counselor Marion Rodrigue LMHC, NCC tells me, this is all thanks to the hyperactivity that occurs in ADHD. You might feel the need to start many projects at once (even though you hardly ever finish them).

9. Failing To Ever Show Up On Time

Are you late to everything every single day? As Martinez tells me, this is typical for people with ADHD. It has to do with your lack of time management skills, as well as all that intense disorganization I was talking about earlier.

10. Avoiding “Difficult” Or Mundane Tasks

As Saltz tells me, those who struggle with ADHD are often “reluctant to do tasks that require mental effort over a long period of time.” So that project you’ve been meaning to start? Or that piles of books you’ve been trying to read? They’re both probably sitting around untouched.

11. Making Lots Of Little Mistakes

Think about how things go for your at work. If you make a million little “careless” mistakes, Saltz tells me it may be due to ADHD. You might send emails before you finish writing them, or leave out tiny but important details during a meeting. It’s not intentional, but it is super frustrating.

As are all the other symptoms of ADHD. If you feel like you’ve got the disorder, don’t be afraid to talk to a therapist. There are plenty of treatment options to make your life way easier, and help get things back on track.